Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell delivered carefully worded remarks at Wednesday’s press conference that markets, analysts, and ordinary Americans parsed closely for signs of what comes next. The Fed held rates steady — as expected — but the language surrounding the decision shifted in ways that signal the central bank is preparing to cut, potentially as soon as June, if inflation data continues to cooperate.
Powell acknowledged that the economy has made “significant further progress” toward the Fed’s 2 percent inflation target while maintaining a labor market that remains “solid but no longer overheated.” Core PCE inflation, the Fed’s preferred measure, came in at 2.4 percent for March — still above target but on a clear downward trend. The combination gives the Fed the political and mathematical cover it needs to begin easing.
The market reaction was immediate: the S&P 500 gained 1.2 percent, the 10-year Treasury yield dipped to 4.1 percent, and mortgage rates ticked down slightly in futures markets. Rate-sensitive sectors — housing, utilities, and small-cap stocks — rallied on the expectation that cheaper borrowing is finally on the horizon.
We are not far from the confidence we need to begin adjusting our policy stance. The question is whether the data continues to give us that confidence.
— Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell
For homebuyers, the implications are significant. Mortgage rates have been hovering near 7 percent for over a year, locking millions of would-be buyers out of the market and suppressing housing supply as existing homeowners refuse to trade in their pandemic-era 3 percent mortgages. A series of rate cuts — even modest ones — could begin to unlock that gridlock, though most economists caution that rates are unlikely to return to pre-pandemic lows anytime soon.
Credit card holders, auto loan borrowers, and small businesses carrying variable-rate debt would also see relief relatively quickly, as those rates are closely tied to the Fed’s benchmark. The timeline matters: most analysts now project two or three quarter-point cuts before year’s end, bringing the federal funds rate from its current 5.25-5.5 percent range down to approximately 4.5 to 4.75 percent by December.
After the most aggressive rate-hiking cycle in four decades, the Fed is finally turning a corner.

The pivot will be gradual — Powell has made that clear — but for millions of Americans who have been waiting, any movement toward lower rates is a meaningful signal that the most painful chapter of the inflation fight may be nearing its end.














